Saturday, February 21, 2009

From the book to the big screen.


Nicholas Sparks has become one of the most well-known and admired love story authors of today. Three of his novels have been transformed into box office hits and this year's release of "Nights in Rodanthe" marked his fourth.

Nicholas Sparks released his novel, Message in a Bottle in 1998 and it was not long before his novel came to life on the big screen in 1999. The film starred Kevin Costner and Robin Wright Penn. The film was a success however, it wasn't until the release of "A Walk to Remember" in 2002 that Nicholas Sparks would receive the praise he deserved. Although in my opinion "A Walk to Remember" was not very true to the novel Sparks released in 1999 the film became a hit among teens and young adults. "A Walk to Remember" starred Mandy Moore and Shane West.

In 2004 the movie version of Nicholas Sparks' The Notebook was released and it is Sparks' most successful novel on film to date. The film starred Rachel McAdam's and Ryan Gosling and has earned a place among the most memorable love stories ever made into a film.

In September of this year Sparks' novel, "Nights in Rodanthe" was made into a major motion picture. The film stars Diane Lane and Richard Gere.

The novel, Nights in Rodanthe opens similar to The Notebook. It begins in the present time and the actual love story is a flash back. Sixty year old Adrienne Willis' daughter Amanda is unable to move on from the sudden death of her husband. Adrienne begins to tell her daughter of an affair she had 15 years earlier when her husband left her and their children for a younger woman. At age 45, Adrienne's husband leaves her with her teenage children and sick father. To get away for a short rest, Adrienne decides to watch over her best friend Jean's Inn while she is away. The Inn is located on the coast of North Carolina, Rodanthe.

While she is at the inn she has one guest. His name is Dr. Paul Flanner, a surgeon with a history and no time for his family. He comes to Rodanthe with hope to escape his shattered past. What happens next? You guessed it, like any good Sparks novel the two fall in love and
in one weekend set in motion feelings that will resonate throughout the rest of their lives.

Nights in Rodanthe is sure to bring a tear to your eye. Although some points in the novel it tended to drag on, it was light and easy to read. As I expected, Sparks is still able to allow his reader to experience the love almost as if they are a character in the story. It is a great way to escape from the real world for a short time. I would recommend this novel for any one who is looking for a short and sweet love story to carry in your beach bag this summer!



Don't feel like reading the novel? Here is the movie trailer for Nights in Rodanthe:

Sunday, February 15, 2009

First thoughts...


Being a college student it is always hard to keep up with new and upcoming writers. It is also hard to follow the writers we love because our heads are buried in our text books. I created this blog to provide you with some school requirement-free reading guidance (Just in case you didn't have time this month to browse the back covers of the "Just Released" section in Barnes and Noble).

For my first review I decided to choose a writer who I have come to greatly admire . Alice Sebold's The Lovely Bones was one of the most beautifully written stories I have ever read. She painted a picture of the tragic tale of Susie Salmon so comprehensibly it was almost as if the scenes were being drawn in front of me as I read. For those of you who have never read 'The Lovely Bones', I highly recommend it.

Alice Sebold's The Almost Moon, her newest novel, is very different from
The Lovely Bones. Those who are expecting a novel similar to it may be disappointed. The Almost Moon is a glum tale about a depressed forty-nine year old woman named Helen. I am not going to lie, Helen is very difficult to like. She is self-centered, she pities herself, and she is foolish. It doesn't become clear to her how low she really is until one day, in a moment of rage and despair she smothers her eighty-eight year old mother who has been suffering from dementia. Don't be alarmed, this fact will not ruin the story in fact Alice Sebold lets you know this in the summary on the back cover. The following chapters are of the next twenty-hours after Helen has killed her mother. Helen begins to look back on her life including her relationship with her mother, her childhood, her husband, and her children as she tries to figure out how she was capable to commit such a heinous act. Despite her loving husband and two wonderful daughters Helen was never able to erase the negativity and self-hatred that her parents had ingrained in her. Helen is not exactly a psychopath but it becomes difficult to understand why she does the things she does and why she thinks the way she does.

This all may sound dull and depressing but it was truly a wonderful novel. The novel explores the psychological effect parents can have on their children, whether it be positive or in Helen's case deeply negative. Although Helen has murdered her mother, as the novel goes on it becomes easier to empathize for her.
At times the novel does in fact become discomforting and the humor can get dark, but for those who are fans of Alice Sebold, it is definitely worth the read. In The Almost Moon Alice Sebold was able to create memorable moments and write in a way that evokes vivid imagery, just as she did in The Lovely Bones.

Critical Praise:

"
Sebold can still write beautiful, haunting scenes.” — Washington Post Book World

“Compulsively readable.” — People

“It is indisputably a good thing when writing is so vivid it causes physical reactions. . . . [Sebold’s] willingness to pry into the darker aspects of human consciousness is what's important.” — Los Angeles Times Book Review